Anthropometric and strength characteristics of adolescent golfers with low and high handicaps
Yaping Cao, Ju Li, Zhongcheng Li, Jian Lang, Rasool Abedanzadeh, Rasool Abedanzadeh

TL;DR
Adolescent golfers with lower handicaps have better physical traits like wider shoulders and stronger muscles, which help them perform better in the sport.
Contribution
This study identifies specific anthropometric and strength characteristics linked to better golf performance in adolescents.
Findings
Low handicap golfers had greater shoulder width, hip, thigh, and calf circumferences.
Low handicap golfers performed better in strength tests like grip strength and jumps.
Strength metrics explained about 60% of the variance in golf handicaps.
Abstract
The athletic performance of adolescent golfers is influenced by various factors, among which strength qualities and anthropometric characteristics are key. However, current research on these aspects among adolescent golfers with different handicaps remains limited. This study aimed to examine anthropometric and strength characteristics in adolescent golfers of differing handicaps and to explore their relationship with golf performance (handicap). This cross-sectional study recruited 40 adolescent golfers (25 males, 15 females) via convenience sampling, divided into low (n = 20) and high (n = 20) handicap groups. Sample size was determined by a priori power analysis. Anthropometric measures (height, shoulder width, hip, thigh, calf circumferences) and standardized strength tests (grip strength, medicine ball throws, standing long jump, countermovement jump) were assessed. Group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Dynamics and Biomechanics · Sports Performance and Training · Sports Analytics and Performance
